The former director also said that @GovAbbott’s decision to send the Texas State Guard to monitor the operation gave Russians proof of the power of such misinformation campaigns. https://t.co/lXwVpgwmkL

A former director of the CIA and NSA said Wednesday that hysteria in Texas over a 2015 U.S. military training exercise called Jade Helm was fueled by Russians wanting to dominate “the information space,” and that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott‘s decision to send the Texas State Guard to monitor the operation gave them proof of the power of such misinformation campaigns.

Michael Hayden, speaking on MSNBC’s Morning Joe podcast, chalked up peoples’ fear over Jade Helm 15 to “Russian bots and the American alt-right media [that] convinced many Texans [Jade Helm] was an Obama plan to round up political dissidents.”

Abbott ordered the State Guard to monitor the federal exercise soon after news broke of the operation. Hayden said that move gave Russians the go-ahead to continue — and possibly expand — their efforts to spread fear.

“At that point, I’m figuring the Russians are saying, ‘We can go big time,’” Hayden said of Abbott’s response. “At that point, I think they made the decision, ‘We’re going to play in the electoral process.’”

Russia is waging war against the US and has been for several years. It is not a conventional war. It does not involve troops – at least not in the US. Rather it is a type of unconventional warfare. It is unconventional not in the classic and doctrinal understanding of unconventional warfare as “operations conducted by, with, and/or through irregular forces in support of a resistance movement, an insurgency, or conventional military operations”. Rather the unconventional warfare that Putin has been engaging in for almost two decades is intended to leverage non-military options across the cyber domain, utilizing broadcast and social media to inflame the grievances and widen the cleavages between targeted demographics to achieve Putin’s strategic objectives. This approach is similar to what the US calls Psychological Operations (PSYOP), which are defined as:

… to induce or reinforce foreign attitudes and behavior favorable to U.S. national objectives. PSYOP are characteristically delivered as information for effect, used during peacetime and conflict, to inform and influence. When properly employed, PSYOP can save lives of friendly and adversary forces by reducing the adversaries’ will to fight. By lowering adversary morale and reducing their efficiency, PSYOP can also discourage aggressive actions and create dissidence and disaffection within their ranks, ultimately inducing surrender. PSYOP provide a commander the means to employ a nonlethal capability across the range of military operations from peace through conflict to war and during post-conflict operations.

It is far past time for American elected and appointed officials to recognize that a new and different type of war is being waged against the US, as well as our allies and partners, and formulate appropriate policies and effective strategies in response. The ongoing failure to do so places us all at risk.

Abbot and his buddies are so far in the fever swamp. it was certainly credible that he really thought Jade Helm was true.
No matter how much evidence accumulates, they’ll never believe/admit that they were manipulated.

It is far past time for American elected and appointed officials to recognize that a new and different type of war is being waged against the US, as well as our allies and partners, and formulate appropriate policies and effective strategies in response. The ongoing failure to do so places us all at risk.

I agree. In my estimation, the Russians pose an existential threat to the future of human civilization with their meddling. I know I’ve been accused of liberal American exceptionalism in the past, but I think that US and its allies (as in fostering environments where individuals can strive to be the best they can be) have the best potential to create a world where people no longer have to be afraid.

Technically, the Russians just joined the war on the US that the GOP started – without the GOP craziness, the disinformation campaign would have flopped. I mean, come on – what kind of damn fool would think that Obama was running a military operation to round up dissidents? Well, any of the GOP-rubes, and probably some of the GOP-cons. (That’s “cons” as in “con artists” – there hasn’t been anything “conservative” about the GOP in a long time).

@Corner Stone: I really think he is. Others may be more corrupt or self-serving, but I honestly can’t think of another one that approaches that Louie Gohmert/Steve King level of whackadoo dumbassedness.

So very hard to quantify. Snotty Walker threw away hundreds (and possibly more) of jobs because they were going to make trains. Kris Krispie turned down billions of federal $$ to (eventually) ease the NYC commute. Yet neither is as big a moron as the Southern Gentlemen.

@Steve in the ATL: I live in MO, and Greitens seems to be fairly intelligent, but is corrupt as hell and has zero sense in how to cover his tracks. Mostly, he’s really power hungry, but managed to piss off his own party enough that he has no power base.

When I had mine, raven advised me to mix it and then stick it in the freezer for an hour or so to get really cold. The medication prevented it from freezing solid and the cold deadened the taste, or at least my taste buds.

I also made sure I had my Kindle or iPad nearby because it was boring. Really boring.

@🌎 🇺🇸 Goku (aka Amerikan Baka) 🗳 🌷: I represent management, not unions! But I do support labor rights, and think that a lot more industries and jobs should be unionized. And not just for my own job security..,,

Russia tested US critical thinking skills. At least half of Texas failed, leading them to correctly assess that prolly somewhere near half of the entire country would fail. How did we end up with so many ignorant gullible rubes here? We must have the largest collection of dipshits on the planet.

I had thought the kerfuffle over Jade Helm was genuine original Made in The USA nuttiness. I am disappointed that the Texan RWNJ lacks the creativity to invent his own nuttiness, and must have it spoonfed to him by Russian propagandists.

I could maybe use some context here, from Adam or ?? — I was in a discussion recently with an ex-special forces guy (don’t remember which branch) and a former CIA agent; the Special Ops guy said he was much more concerned about North Korea than about what he dismissively called a ‘pee tape’; the ex-CIA guy said basically that anyone who thinks the US hasn’t been engaged in the same kinds of cyber-psyops in other countries is just ridiculously naïve. The discussion made me reconsider some of my assumptions about whether the US really IS ‘the good guys’, or rather is just another bunch of thugs engaged in the same sorts of covert psyops in other countries that the Russians are. (I don’t have a definitive conclusion to that, since I honestly don’t have information on that that doesn’t come out of spy novels or ‘Homeland’ or my 50’s orientation of ‘commies=bad, US=good’.)

We – the US – have fooled around with lots of other countries elections or their results. Chile in 1973, Iran in 1953 (remember that nice secular Mr. Mossadegh?), Guatemala in1953, Italian politics and elections since the end of ww2….those are more or less public knowledge. Whenever and wherever it suited and we could get away with it, more or less.

I detest interference in US elections of any sort by anybody, but there is a certain amount or irony present.

@lumpkin: Even worse, they managed to sucker in basically every RWNJ in the country on that one. I’m thankful I hadn’t gotten near FB at that time. I probably would have alienated several friends and family members on that one.

In the words of your mother, just because your brother did something doesn’t mean that you get to do it, too. Saying that the US genocide of the Native Americans was worse than South African apartheid doesn’t mean that Americans should not have been allowed to oppose apartheid since we did much worse.

Ehh, prolly not. For instance, India’s population is 1.3B people. And I’ll bet they have exactly as many rubes per capita as we do — after all, they have their own version of fundamentalism and all that. Someone once said we live in a Red State World: every country has their equivalent of redneck cracker fundamentalist assholes.

@🌎 🇺🇸 Goku (aka Amerikan Baka) 🗳 🌷: @dimmsdale: Mr Piranha, I agree that we’ve got a deplorable record — both overseas and in our own country. But guess what? It’s -our- country, and -we- are the ones who decide how to fix it. Not some fuckin’ jumped-up Russian Thief-for-Life masquerading as KGB masquerading as a politician. This is our country, and if we think we’ve done wrong, WE should decide how to fix it.

Where I was raised (as it turns out, in Texas), that’s called Patriotism.

I’ve always wondered about synergy of right-wing disinformation; do you think RWNJ media run survey panels for their disinformation?

Like how do they know Uncle Cletus will be willing to believe X? Is it just assumed cracker nation will believe anything which makes them feel victimized and/or has the potential to hurt brown folk and China people?

I suppose at this point they just ask Vlad which propaganda works best:(

I had thought the kerfuffle over Jade Helm was genuine original Made in The USA nuttiness.

It’s entirely too easy to spin up conspiracy theories that go viral within US right wing communications networks. And successful ones live for decades, at least. (i.e. don’t do it unless absolutely necessary.)